Sun cools HotJava's browser aspects

Sun Microsystems released the latest
in a series of
pre-beta versions of its HotJava
Browser but is now pitching the software as more of a development tool
than as a traditional Web browser.

Sun will unveil a detailed roadmap for HotJava that includes a release date for
the final version
and pricing at its Java One developers' conference in San
Francisco later this month. In the meantime, the company has posted a
new release to its Web site.

HotJava itself is written in Java and was originally distributed as a
showcase for applets created in Sun's Java programming language. Compared to
the alpha3 version released in April 1995, HotJava has evolved into a framework for software developers to create their own user environments on the Web, said David Spenhoff, Javasoft director of product marketing.

"We want people to see it as a framework to develop custom or branded user
environments to do things that metaphorically aren't
'browser things' but are still network-based transactions," Spenhoff said.